It’s been quite a fortnight. At the end of January, I accompanied the UK Development Secretary, Andrew Mitchell, to the AU Summit in Addis Ababa and then to Somalia. In Dollow – the first time a British Minister has visited southern Somalia in recent years, Mr Mitchell saw for himself the huge difference that UKaid is making to the lives of thousands of Somali people in the south. Arriving in Garowe on Monday on the first-ever visit by a British Cabinet Minister to Puntland, the Minister received a warm welcome and was able to see for himself what’s possible with greater stability and security – in health care, rule of law, jobs and security. And in what was truly a ground-breaking visit, he was able to personally destroy over 45kg of unexploded ordnance – a further sign of the progress being made in helping to make Puntland safer, with the UK’s support.
36 hours in Nairobi and then it was back to Mogadishu on Thursday, this time accompanying the British Foreign Secretary, William Hague – the first visit by a British Foreign Secretary since Douglas Hurd in 1992. And it was of real significance for me personally, as I was able to present my credentials from Her Majesty the Queen as the first British Ambassador to Somalia since 1991, in front of both the Foreign Secretary, and the President of the TFG, Sheikh Sharif, as well as the assembled press corps.
I’m hugely proud to have been appointed as the UK’s first Ambassador to Somalia in twenty years. I’m also overwhelmed and hugely touched by the warm response from Somalis around the world. It’s more than a change of job title – to me, it’s about our commitment to Somalia; it’s about our unwavering desire to engage with the Somali people and help bring about change for the better. It’s about the long-term and, undoubtedly, the long-haul. Some of my predecessors saw Somalia at its very best; our job is to help Somalia recover that – focusing first on supporting greater stability in the country and ensuring we provide the best advice we can both to Somalia’s leaders and the UK Government and assure the UK tax-payer that we are delivering results on the ground, for Somalis and the UK. We’re in this together.
And so to last weekend. I wrote most of this on the flight back from Djibouti where I participated in the meeting of the International Contact Group (ICG) on Somalia. At the ICG, there was a real – and renewed – sense of urgency; unanimity that the Transition should end this summer; widespread agreement that we need to do more to support communities across Somalia and enhance security. Last year’s famine was catastrophic; last week the UN announced that while the famine may have passed, millions remain at risk. Progress in Mogadishu, Puntland and elsewhere – as we saw last week – mean we have to seize the moment. Cowardly and barbaric acts such as this week’s bombing in Mogadishu only strengthen our resolve.
And so attention now shifts to the London Conference. Two weeks from now, world leaders from some 50 countries and organisations will meet in London with the single aim of ensuring we can support Somalia and the Somali people better and more effectively. This high-level summit, unprecedented in recent years, will seek to galvanise a more effective joint approach that strengthens the crucial work of the Somali leadership and the UN, AU and IGAD.
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